Sheriff Mariam Al-Merghani

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A great Islamic preacher in Sudan who had significant contributions regarding women’s education and several other religious movements. Merghani was born in 1886 and died at the age of 66, since then people from different parts of east Sudan gather annually to commemorate her death in Sinkat -a small town in eastern Sudan- where her shrine is located,[1] and during the gathering women usually wear colourful Toub (Sudanese women’s traditional cloths). Sheriff Mariam had no children during her lifetime, therefore, she treated orphans and poor people as her sons and daughters, which gained her their love and respect, that is the reason behind calling her ‘the mother of the poor people’.[2]

Contributions

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After her husband’s death in 1903, Sheriff Mariam began her journey of guidance to Islam in her town and other areas around it. Through the years she had built many mosques and ‘Khalawi’ (Places where young girls and women used to learn and recite the Quran), as well as her contribution in supporting the education of many families in Port Sudan and the Egyptian Secondary school as she used to pay the salaries for some of the school workers. Until today, a school holding her name ‘The Sheriff Mariam Al-Marghani’ is where elementary students are being taught. However, her efforts were not limited to education only, Merghani made sure to focus on spreading the culture of tolerance and coexistence between different tribes in her town.[1][3]

Lifestyle

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File:Eastern Sudan.jpg
People gathering to commemorate her death

The Sheriff’s lifestyle can be described as simple and humble, for instance, she used to eat, drink, wear and live with her own money. Her sheep was the source of food and the well -She dug using her money- in Suakin was her source of water to drink and perform ablution for prayers. As her successor, Abdullah Mohammed Ibrahim says that Merghani’s clothes were all about a white gauze dress and she used to cut a couple of pieces from the cloth and sew it again in order to make it look patched although it is a new dress, and this is a way of behaving modestly. For the sake of diminishing discrimination, Siti Mariam -As people in Kassala call her- used to live in a mud house like the houses of the major class of her community.[1]

Death

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The love that people in Sudan had for Sheriff Mariam Al-Merghani extended to some parts of Egypt as well. During her sickness, King Farouk (the tenth ruler of Egypt) send a whole medical staff with his steamship ‘Al Mahrousa’ taking her to Al-Mowasat Hospital in Alexandria. Nevertheless, she stayed there for around 5 months, nearly after she went back to Sudan, she got sick again. The Egyptian government sent another medical staff in a military aircraft to rescue her, however, nothing helped and Siti Mariam knew that it was time to leave life behind, therefore, she asked them to put a cloth on her face and leave her alone. When they came back, she was already dead.[1]

Reference List

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  1. ^ a b c d عثمان, مزدلفة. "الشريفة مريم الميرغنية.. سيرة سودانية حصدت المحبة جيلا بعد جيل". www.aljazeera.net (in Arabic). Retrieved 2021-10-27.
  2. ^ "من هي "أم المساكين" التي يجتمع عندها نساء ورجال شرقي السودان كل عام... صور". arabic.sputniknews.com (in Arabic). Retrieved 2021-10-27.
  3. ^ "الشريفة مريم الميرغنية.. سيرة امرأة سودانية خالدة - صحيفة الراكوبة". www.alrakoba.net (in Arabic). -001-11-30T00:00:00+00:00. Retrieved 2021-10-27. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

Category:Scholars Category:Sudan Category:Sudan-related lists Category:Islam-related lists Category:Women Category:Education Category:Islam Category:Sudanese women